2026
Brazil is the main coffee producer in the world. However, the impacts of climate change driven by greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions pose a major challenge for agriculture in tropical regions. This study established a GHG inventory of coffee production on farms in southern Minas Gerais, Brazil, over a two-year period, adopting a cradle-to-farm-gate approach. It considered scopes 1 and 2 emissions from on-farm activities. The emission inventories were based on Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) methodologies adapted for Brazilian conditions. The emissions were categorized in direct and biogenic and by area (in hectares) and production (kg of coffee). Electricity consumption, fossil fuel use, wood burning and fertilizer application were considered. Direct total emissions ranged from 2617 to 6211 t CO2e, 2.67 to 3.81 t CO2e ha−1, and from 1.52 to 4.59 kg CO2e kg−1 of coffee. Biogenic emissions ranged from 336 to 4955 t CO2e, 0.28 to 2.95 t CO2e ha−1, and from 0.32 to 2.21 kg CO2e kg−1 of coffee. Urea-based nitrogen fertilizers were the main source of direct emission and wood burning was the main source of biogenic emission. Management practices such as applying non-urea-based fertilizers, adjusting nitrogen rates according to soil analyses and manual harvesting contributed to mitigating GHG emissions. The observed emission intensities were consistent with other reported values for Brazilian coffee production. Further reductions may be achieved by adopting agroforestry systems, increasing coffee straw retention in the soil and replacing urea with alternative nitrogen sources, including slow-release fertilizers and urease-inhibitor technologies.
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